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An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition

Premarital fertility, that is, childbearing before first marriage, is an important yet under researched demographic topic in sub-Saharan Africa. In Zimbabwe, the distinction by marital status in fertility research is hardly drawn. Hence, a gap exists in the knowledge of premarital fertility levels....

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Main Author: Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda
Other Authors: Moultrie, Thomas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE) 2022
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access_status_str Open Access
author Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda
author2 Moultrie, Thomas
author_browse Moultrie, Thomas
Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda
author_facet Moultrie, Thomas
Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda
author_sort Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda
collection Thesis
description Premarital fertility, that is, childbearing before first marriage, is an important yet under researched demographic topic in sub-Saharan Africa. In Zimbabwe, the distinction by marital status in fertility research is hardly drawn. Hence, a gap exists in the knowledge of premarital fertility levels. This research aims to investigate levels of, and factors associated with, premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition in the mid-1980s. The research employed direct fertility estimation techniques to effectively compare premarital, marital, and overall fertility trends between 1988 and 2015. Cox proportional-hazards regression and forest plot analyses were then used to explain changes in factors associated with the timing of premarital first births over the same period. Data quality assessments were carried out using the method of cohortperiod fertility rates to provide explanations for any erratic results. The results showed that premarital fertility was constant and moderate, with an average of 0.7 children per woman, between 1988 and 2015. While most premarital first births consistently occurred to younger women, from 2005 onwards, they increased among women aged above 24 years and decreased among adolescents. An increase in age, commencing sexual activity after adolescence, and improved socio-economic status including level of education decreased the relative risk of having a premarital first birth. However, delaying marriage past young womanhood, history of contraceptive use, Ndebele ethnicity, and residence in regions other than Manicaland and Masvingo, especially Ndebele dominated regions, increased the same risk by 465.0%, 45.5%, 136.0% and up to 135.0% respectively. The stagnation of premarital fertility between 1988 and 2015 while both marital and overall fertility first declined and then stalled indicates that there is insufficient evidence to suggest that premarital fertility had contributed to the stall of fertility decline in Zimbabwe from the mid-1990s. The timing of premarital first births since the start of the fertility transition in the 1980s has had a strong ethnic and cultural bias. Due to evidence of the effect of migrancy and tourism on premarital fertility in border and tourism towns, an extension into the theory of migrant premarital sexual behaviour to detail the risk of premarital fertility among border town residents who interact with but are neither migrants nor tourists is recommended.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:36:57.723Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE)
publisherStr Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE)
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/36110 An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda Moultrie, Thomas fertility transition premarital fertility adolescents young women Zimbabwe Ndebele Shona Cox proportional hazards regression Premarital fertility, that is, childbearing before first marriage, is an important yet under researched demographic topic in sub-Saharan Africa. In Zimbabwe, the distinction by marital status in fertility research is hardly drawn. Hence, a gap exists in the knowledge of premarital fertility levels. This research aims to investigate levels of, and factors associated with, premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition in the mid-1980s. The research employed direct fertility estimation techniques to effectively compare premarital, marital, and overall fertility trends between 1988 and 2015. Cox proportional-hazards regression and forest plot analyses were then used to explain changes in factors associated with the timing of premarital first births over the same period. Data quality assessments were carried out using the method of cohortperiod fertility rates to provide explanations for any erratic results. The results showed that premarital fertility was constant and moderate, with an average of 0.7 children per woman, between 1988 and 2015. While most premarital first births consistently occurred to younger women, from 2005 onwards, they increased among women aged above 24 years and decreased among adolescents. An increase in age, commencing sexual activity after adolescence, and improved socio-economic status including level of education decreased the relative risk of having a premarital first birth. However, delaying marriage past young womanhood, history of contraceptive use, Ndebele ethnicity, and residence in regions other than Manicaland and Masvingo, especially Ndebele dominated regions, increased the same risk by 465.0%, 45.5%, 136.0% and up to 135.0% respectively. The stagnation of premarital fertility between 1988 and 2015 while both marital and overall fertility first declined and then stalled indicates that there is insufficient evidence to suggest that premarital fertility had contributed to the stall of fertility decline in Zimbabwe from the mid-1990s. The timing of premarital first births since the start of the fertility transition in the 1980s has had a strong ethnic and cultural bias. Due to evidence of the effect of migrancy and tourism on premarital fertility in border and tourism towns, an extension into the theory of migrant premarital sexual behaviour to detail the risk of premarital fertility among border town residents who interact with but are neither migrants nor tourists is recommended. 2022-03-15T13:39:32Z 2022-03-15T13:39:32Z 2021 2022-03-11T07:39:43Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36110 eng application/pdf Centre for Actuarial Research (CARE) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle fertility transition
premarital fertility
adolescents
young women
Zimbabwe
Ndebele
Shona
Cox proportional hazards regression
Ngwenya, Chantelle Linda
An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition
thesis_degree_str Master's
title An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition
title_full An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition
title_fullStr An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition
title_full_unstemmed An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition
title_short An investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of Zimbabwe's fertility transition
title_sort investigation into the progression of premarital fertility since the onset of zimbabwe s fertility transition
topic fertility transition
premarital fertility
adolescents
young women
Zimbabwe
Ndebele
Shona
Cox proportional hazards regression
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/36110
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AT ngwenyachantellelinda investigationintotheprogressionofpremaritalfertilitysincetheonsetofzimbabwesfertilitytransition